9 years ago over in Iraq, we had a jet nearly hit the ground during a night instrument approach. As the pilot was being directed to final for a non-precision (ATC radar out, reporting points in use); he'd had a long night mission and was pretty fatigued. After reporting established on the arc, he was given approach clearance, report FAF inbound. He commenced a descent from there and turned from the arc onto final (dark night, IMC). Unbeknownst to him his crosscheck had broken down, and as he was concentrating on the TACAN (VOR) intermittently breaking lock as he was trying to roll out on the inbound course, he missed the fact that he just blew through the intermediate altitude, and was headed at 1500 fpm to the ground below. The PAR radar was down, and some workers were doing maintenance on it. As you all know the PAR radar, unlike a terminal radar, has a very limited field of view up the glidepath (much like an ILS localizer)....it can't see traffic outside that, nor does it want to....it's job is to direct one aircraft at a time down the final approach path to a precision landing.
Anyhow, the workers get the part installed that they need, and fire up the PAR scope. A 19 yr old Airman ATC apprentice, is up on approach frequency to coordinate with approach about their out-of-service surveillance radar. The PAR scope comes on, but it's only getting tested, so he's not paying too much attention to it, but he notices a secondary blip (the IFF of the A-10 on approach), just as it comes into the edge of his scope. The PAR radar had been down, since it had been giving erroneous target data from radar returns. The Airman sees the blip reading 5100' and descending. Not knowing if this is correct so far as the radar goes (whether it's working or not), but knowing full well that the altitude (if correct) is well below MVA, puts out a call on Guard "On Guard, aircraft approaching final at Kirkuk, altitude alert, check altitude, terrain alert. Climb to 6400 immediately." The pilot in the A-10 hears this and, cross-checking his altitude, sees that it's him that's being talked to. He commences a pull while simultaneously rolling wings-level, and bottoms out at 150 AGL in IMC , it's later determined.